THE SILENCE OF DRAGONS BONES
THE SILENCE OF DRAGONS BONES
Author: A. Latin Dipupo
THE FINAL BREATH
last update2026-06-28 04:10:16

​Leave him to the rot, the captain sneered, his voice cutting through the dry, biting wind like a rusted blade. Do not waste another ounce of water on a dead man walking.

​Lennon Vale did not look back. He could not. His legs had long since surrendered, turning into heavy blocks of lead that dragged through the jagged rocks of the wasteland. Behind him, the rhythmic thud of his clansmen retreating sounded like a funeral drum beating in the silence of the end of the world. He was nineteen, a supposed exile, a castoff left to feed the dust. The sun was a dying ember hanging in a bruised sky, offering no warmth to the frost beginning to crust over his torn tunic.

​Are you still breathing, trash? one of the younger scouts jeered from a distance, throwing a parting stone that clipped Lennon’s shoulder.

​Lennon tasted copper as he slammed into the grit. Get lost, he rasped, his throat feeling like he had swallowed a handful of glass.

​Leave him, the captain commanded again, impatient. We have a long trek before the stars align. The Void waits for no one, least of all a failure like Vale.

​Lennon listened as their footsteps faded into the vast, howling nothingness. He was alone. The silence that followed was absolute, a heavy shroud that seemed to press the very air from his lungs. He forced his head up, scanning the horizon. There was nothing but endless gray mounds, shapes that looked like mountains until you realized they were far too structured, far too curved.

​He crawled. His fingers bled as they caught on sharp outcroppings, but he did not stop. He needed cover. The temperature was plummeting, and he could feel the cold turning his blood sluggish. He spotted a massive, arched structure rising out of the earth like a skeletal cathedral. It was an impossible shape, a ribcage the size of a city block, curved toward the heavens.

​He dragged his broken body into the shelter of the bone, seeking a reprieve from the wind. It felt safer here, hidden within the hollow cavity of a forgotten titan.

​Is this the end then? Lennon whispered to the stillness. Just another stain on the dirt.

​He collapsed against the base of a massive, dark pedestal. His hand, shaking uncontrollably, brushed against something cold and smooth. It felt like polished stone, yet it had a strange, organic texture. He shifted, his fingers tracing the curve of a gargantuan skull. It was obsidian, darker than the night sky, and carved with intricate runes that seemed to pulse with a faint, rhythmic light.

​What are you? he muttered, his curiosity briefly overriding his pain.

​He pushed his palm flat against the smooth forehead of the skull. A shock, violent and sharp, tore through his nervous system. It was not just heat. It was a scream, a roar of a thousand voices hitting him at once. He saw fire, a sky burning in shades of violet and gold, and the sensation of wings spanning across an entire horizon. He saw cities built on clouds falling into the sea. He saw the end of everything he had ever known.

​Lennon tried to pull his hand away, but he was pinned. It was as if his very soul was being siphoned into the bone. The memories were not his, yet they burned into his mind with the permanence of a brand. He saw a man, a figure clad in armor made of dragon scales, standing amidst the carnage, reaching out a hand as if to stop the sky from collapsing.

​Let go, Lennon gasped, his voice breaking. I do not belong to you.

​The skull hummed, a low vibration that rattled Lennon’s teeth. The sound grew until it was a physical weight, pushing against his chest. Then, suddenly, the pressure vanished. Lennon flopped backward, gasping for air as if he had just surfaced from deep water. He stared at his hand. A black, swirling mark now marred his skin, glowing with a soft, pulsing light that seemed to sync with his heartbeat.

​He sat up, trembling. The graveyard was no longer silent. The wind that had been howling before now carried whispers, hundreds of them, overlapping in a chaotic, ancient language. He looked up at the ribcage towering over him. The bones were not just debris anymore. They were vibrant, shimmering with a faint, spectral aura that painted the shadows in shades of blue.

​What have you done to me? he asked the skull, his voice barely a tremor in the newfound noise.

​The skull did not answer, but the ground beneath him trembled. Lennon scrambled away, watching in horror as the dirt shifted and spilled away to reveal more, endless rows of buried leviathans. He was not just in a wasteland. He was standing in the center of a mass grave of gods.

​He stood up, his legs surprisingly steady. The pain in his shoulder had dulled to a distant throb. He looked at the black mark on his hand and clenched his fist. He could feel it now, a reservoir of cold, stagnant energy pooling in his core. It was not his, but it was answering to him.

​So you are finally awake, the Keeper, a voice echoed in his head.

​Lennon spun around, his hand flying to the dagger at his belt. Who is there? Show yourself!

​There is no need for such hostility, boy, the voice continued, smooth and dry as parchment. You have broken the seal. You have touched the throne. You are the first guest we have had in centuries.

​Lennon searched the shadows between the giant ribs. The light of the mark on his hand flared, casting long, erratic shadows that seemed to dance of their own accord. A figure, or the suggestion of one, coalesced in the center of the vault. It was tall, draped in tatters of shadow, with eyes that burned like dying stars.

​You are the one who led them here? Lennon demanded, his heart hammering against his ribs. The clansmen? The betrayal?

​The shadow figure tilted its head. Your petty clan politics are beneath the notice of the dead. They are merely ants scurrying over the surface of a sleeping beast. You, however, are the one who woke it.

​Lennon took a step back, his boots crunching on something brittle. He looked down and realized he was standing on a layer of teeth. He looked back at the spirit. I do not care about your beast or your politics. I want to live. I want to survive.

​Survival is a small ambition for one who carries the weight of the graveyard, the spirit replied, drifting closer. You were cast out to die because you were a vessel they could not understand. They feared what you would become.

​Lennon felt a surge of cold anger, sharper than any blade. They did not understand anything. They are cowards hiding behind rules they do not even comprehend.

​Exactly, the spirit whispered, its voice now right against Lennon’s ear. And now, you have the power to show them the meaning of true fear.

​Lennon looked at the obsidian skull, then back at the shifting, haunted landscape surrounding him. The fear that had paralyzed him earlier was being replaced by a dark, hungry resolve. He was an exile, a failure, a ghost. But as he looked at the thousands of colossal bones stretching into the darkness, he felt a strange sense of belonging.

​If I am the Keeper, what do I keep? Lennon asked, his voice steadying.

​The spirits of the forgotten, the shadow replied. The memories of the erased. And eventually, the justice that has been denied for far too long.

​Lennon reached out and touched the hilt of a sword protruding from the dirt nearby. The blade was chipped, stained with the rust of ages, but it felt weightless in his hand. He looked toward the horizon, back toward the direction his clan had gone.

​Justice, he repeated, the word tasting like iron on his tongue. I think I like that.

​The spirit laughed, a sound that resembled shifting ice. Then let us begin your education. There is much to learn before the hunters return for what you have stolen.

​Lennon stood tall, his eyes catching the faint, pulsating light from the mark on his hand. The graveyard began to glow, a symphony of ancient power rising from the earth to meet him. He felt the weight of the ghosts, the crushing pressure of their stories, and he realized he was no longer just Lennon Vale. He was the bridge. He was the conduit. And he was very, very dangerous.

​You said they would return? Lennon asked, his gaze narrowing.

​They are already on their way, the spirit confirmed. They know you survived. They know you have found the keys.

​Lennon looked at the dark mark on his skin, then at the vast, desolate expanse of the graveyard. Let them come, he whispered, a cold, hard smile touching his lips. I have plenty of room here to bury them all.

​The wind picked up, swirling the dust and bone shards into a vortex around him. The graveyard was no longer a place of death, but a fortress of memories. Lennon Vale took his first step into the deep, dark heart of his new home, and for the first time in his life, he did not feel like an exile. He felt like a king among the dead, waiting for his crown.

​He walked past the obsidian skull, his hand grazing it once more. He felt a flicker of recognition, a brief flash of a dragon soaring through a sun-drenched sky, before it settled into the steady rhythm of his own heartbeat. The path ahead was dark, fraught with dangers he could not yet name, but the whispers in his mind were no longer confusing. They were instructions. They were lessons.

​This is only the beginning, Lennon said to the empty air, his voice resolute.

​Indeed, the spirit echoed. The silence is finally over.

​Lennon moved deeper into the ribcage, the massive bones acting as sentinels guarding his progress. Every step was a declaration of war against the people who had tried to break him. He did not know what the future held, but he knew one thing for certain. He would never be the one running in the dark again. He was the one who would be waiting in the shadows, ready to strike when the time was right.

​He looked up at the bruising sky, the stars beginning to pierce the gloom like needles. He was ready. He had died in the pits, but he had been reborn in the grave. And those who had thrown him into the dirt would soon learn that some things are better left buried. But he was not buried. He was wide awake.

​Lennon Vale, the Keeper of the Dragon Graveyard, took a breath of the frigid air and let it out as a mist of frost. He was ready for whatever came next. He was ready for the war.

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    ​You have to kill the ground before the void creatures claim it, Elara shouted, her silver eyes locked on the horizon where the darkness was literally crawling over the bone dunes like a tidal wave of ink.​Lennon stood at the edge of his new garden, his boots digging into the rich, glowing soil he had spent the last day cultivating. The flowers he had planted, the shimmering crystalline blooms born from the memories of the fallen, were beginning to wilt. The air had turned foul, smelling of wet iron and rot, as the rift in the sky deepened.​What are you talking about? Lennon yelled back, his hand gripped tightly around the hilt of his sword. I just brought this place to life. You told me to make it grow. Now you want me to burn it?​Elara scrambled up the ridge to stand beside him, her robes fluttering in the freezing wind that preceded the void creatures. The garden is a magnet, Lennon. The Judge does not just want to prune the weeds. It wants the energy you have gathered here. Eve

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